See Jane Go, a ride-hailing startup for women only, has exited Southern California streets as of Tuesday, Jan. 9. Chief Executive Officer Cassandra Miller told customers in a note posted on Facebook ...
Ride hailing services aimed at women drivers and passengers are a small but growing niche. See Jane Go is officially up and running today; drivers and passengers can download the app on iOS or Android ...
After operating for more than a year, See Jane Go announced it would halt its services as of Jan. 9 because of a lack of funding. See Jane Go was started by William Jordan, and his daughter, Savannah ...
The idea was a ride-sharing service where women drivers served women passengers—the safety of both the driving force behind See Jane Go. But just sixteen months after its first fare, See Jane Go ...
When 18-year-old Savannah Jordan first told her father she might join Uber as a driver, he said something to the effect of “over my dead body.” But instead of stopping at a hard “no,” Savannah and her ...
A ridesharing-service app for women drivers and passengers launched recently in southern California. See Jane Go has started operating in Orange County, California but plans aggressive nationwide ...
In response to alleged sexual assaults by Uber and Lyft drivers, a women-only ride service rolls onto the scene. Dara Kerr was a senior reporter for CNET covering the on-demand economy and tech ...
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Earlier this spring, Safeher (the ride-hailing service formerly known as Chariot for Women) established itself in the Boston area as a safer service for women drivers and passengers. Now See Jane Go ...
Take Two translates the day’s headlines for Southern California, making sense of the news and cultural events that affect our lives. Produced by Southern California Public Radio and broadcast from ...
"I think that every woman that gets into a car has that initial fear," says Ingrid Newman of Costa Mesa, Calif. She says she feels it every time she calls a Lyft to take her elderly mother to her ...
Savannah Jordan didn’t plan to launch a business at 18. She was considering a future career as an elementary school teacher, scoping out part-time job options flexible enough to balance with college.
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